Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 153, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 November 1929 — Page 3

3fOV. 6, 1929

HOOVER SPLIT WITH JOHNSON IS REVEALED Open Break Between Senator and President Seen by Observers. Bu United Urrgg WASHINGTON, Nov. 6.—lndications of an open break between President Hoover and Senator Hiram Johnson (Rep., Cal.) were seen by political observers today, in the fact that Johnson was the only member of the senate foreign relations committee not Invited to the dinner given at the White House Tuesday night in honor of Ambassador Charles G. Dawes. All members of the committee now In Washington, excepting Johnson and Senator Swanson (Dem., Va.) were announced as guests. Swanson excused himself because he is mourning the death of a brother. Three members, Robinson (Dem., Ark ); Shipstead (F.-L., Minn.), and Wagner (Dem., N. Y.), were out of the city. • Johnson’s failure to receive an invitation was unexplained by the White House and was not discussed by the senator. There was, however, no dearth of unofficial comment and speculation. The omission was accepted generally as an unmistakable sign the rumored break between the President and the senior senator from his home state had reached a head. Johnson supported Hoover during the presidential campaign and was a guest at the Hoover home before the election. There were indications, however, that they disagreed on several points of importance. Concrete evidence of these differences came during the present special session of congress, when Johnson, on the senate floor, vigorously opposed the flexible provision in the tariff bill and upheld the debenture clause. In both he came In direct opposition to administration views.

BANK FRAUD CASE ENDS Mtlrav Conspiracy Trial Is Given to Federal JuryJohn Cioroianu, 506 West Washington street, was convicted by a jury in federal court of nuisance in connection with sale of liquor in his West Washington street grocery store. He will be sentenced later. Case of Frank Harvery, former Milroy (Ind.) garage owner, charged with aiding and abetting Lloyd T. Nelson in embezzling money from the First National bank of Milroy of which Nelson was cashier, went to the jury at noon today. The government charged that while Harvey's account was overdrawn for months at a time, the bank records were altered to show a balance. Nelson, who is serving a federal prison term in connection with this and other similar transactions, was named codefendant, pleading guilty. PADEREWSKI IS BETTER Pianist, Convalescing From Illness, Celebrates 69th Birthday. Bu United l’rt ns LAUSANNE, Switzerland, Nov. 6. —lgnace Jean Paderewski, acknowledged as the world’s greatest pianist, celebrated his sixty-ninth birthday here today recuperating from an illness. According to all reports, the musician, who also has been a soldier and statesman, is making a miraculous recovery from an operation for appendicitis followed by phlebitis in the leg.

SHOTGUN SHELLS Peter's Target Smokeless. 12Gauage Shells, Fresh Stock, M Box M HABICHS 136 E. WASHINGTON ST. i Berthe profit of L borrow, * C have II prepared a VI l I l The 1 Metropotita" I 1 and 2 other 1 Mortgage Loan | Plans | If yon want * oa ”’ 1 1- t ] I to write or Ia copyII Lo*n limitea to i* 1 proved - ®ruat lanks Northwest Comer l?*un lylvaoM and Mirbt fc- SdMCa

Millionaire’s Wife Fights for Custody of Children

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Above, Mrs. Franklin Hardinge, with Troy and Norman Weems, her sons; below, the two boys as they appeared at the farm home with their grandmother, Mrs. Joe Weems.

Bone From Hip Used to Repair Shattered Jaw r.:i / i>m . special FT. WAYNE. Ind., Nov. 6. Surgeons at .the Lutheran hospital here are using pieces from the hip bone of Miss Colpaert, Berne young woman, to rebuild her lower jaw, shattered when she was shot by Hector Van Dale, who killed himself. A full load from a shotgun struck Miss Copaert in the jaw and a shoulder. Van Dale fired because Miss Colpaert spurned his attentions.

PROPOSAL CONDEMNED Engineer Says Low Power Rates Would Result in Loss. Bu l nihil Ur, gg WASHINGTON, Nov. 6.—The plan of Walter H. Wheeler, Minneapolis engineer, to sell hydroelectric power t sls per horsepower year, would .--suit in a $214,116 yearly loss, rather than a profit? he contemplates earning, H. H. Cochrane, chief engineer of the Montana Power Company, told the federal power commission today. Both Wheeler and the Montana Power Company are appearing before the commission in behalf of their application to develop a hydro-electric plant on the Flathead river in Montana.

LAUDS BRITISH ‘UNITY MacDonald Declares Desire for Peace Can Ilfot Fall. Bu United /'ri ng LEICESTER. England, Nov. 6. Unanimity of the British people for international amity will prevent defeat. of the naval disarmament proposals, Premier J. Ramsay MacDonald said today in receiving the freedom of this city. Referring to his American trip. MacDonald said: 1 “The journey was madq suceessi ful, not by anything I did, but what : the people of the country did. There nre no parties in Britain. It is-united, both in prayers and hopes. I feel that such tremendous moral backing i can not- possible be defeated.’’ CHILD'S FATHER SUES

Damages of SIO,OOO for injuries ! sustained by a 7-year-old boy when i he was struck by a truck Sept. 11, at Orange street and Barth avenue, were asked in a suit filed today in Superior court five by Mack Browning, the child's father. C..A. Schrader and Company, wholesale dealers, were named defendant. The complaint charged the truck driver was negligent in operating ; the truck, striking the child as he | crossed the street intersection. The ; child's left leg was broken, permanently disabling him, it is i alleged. AM E RON GIRL W EOS By Vnitcd Prtts DUBLIN. Nov. 6.—Miss Frances I Ferris, daughter of the American consul-general, Cornelius Ferris, was married today to Lieutenant Arthur Duff of the Army School of Music, in the Unitarian church. A fashionable crowd attended the wedding, including American Minister and Mrs. Frederick A. Sterling. Miss Ferris' home is Denver. In the Air Weather conditions at 9:30 a. m.: West wind, six miles an hour; temperature, 44: barometric pressure, 30.17; ceiling, unlimited; visibility, six miles; field, good. Arrivals and Departures Hoosier Airport—A- V. Bender and K. F. Griffith. St. Louis Cardinal monoplane, returned to Chicago; H. S. McKee, of Chicago, Breguet oiplane, to St. Louis. Curtiss-Mars Hill Airport—Transcontinental Air Transport passengers included Walker W. Winslow: Curtjgi sales director, to St. Louis. ■

Court Must Rule Whether Sons Will Be Reared in Luxury. KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Nov. 6. Whether two bright-eyed boys will live in luxury in Chicago, or in the middle-class atmosphere of an eastern Tennessee home, was the center of a court controversy here today. Seeking to bring up her two sons by a first marriage by means of the wealth of her second husband, Mrs. Franklin S. Hardinge, wife of the Chicago oil burner manufacturer, faced in the domestic relations courtroom Sergeant Troy Weems, United States army, their father. For the boys, Troy, 8, and Norman, 6, the proceedings were of slight interest. They sat by their mother, but fingered a medal and sharpshooter’s badge their father had pinned on their The hearing on Mrs. Hardinge’s habeaS corpus petition evolved into a controversy over the merits of the respective homes of the millionaire’s wife and that of the boys’ paternal grandparents. : So far it has been asserted that ■ as church attendants neither family is regular, that Hardinge has made a will providing funds so the boys can be sent to college, and ; that the boys are not particular with, whom they live. Mrs. Hardinge, the former Cath- | erine Eatherly, a knitting mill worker here, was married to Hardi inge in Florida several months ago, 1 shortly before Ann Livingston, Tulsa, Okla., stenographer won a $25,000 verdict from the millionaire i in a breach of promise action. Weems was divorced by his wife early this year on desertion charges.

SEEK COUNTERFEITERS WHEELING, W. Va., Nov. 6. Small sized currency is no deterrent to forgers, Wheeling residents have discovered that midget $5 bills have been counterfeited. The discovery has led to the arrival of squads of investigators from the federal justice and treasury departments.

Me e and less Suffering The next time & headache makes ¥ Or some other ache or pain prevents your keeping an engagement—there is scarcely any pain it cannot JHST These tablets give real relief, or millions would not continue to take apHUIH them. They are quite harmless, or M the medical profession would not A, R Don’t be a martyr to unnecessary pain. To colds that might so For your own protection, buy the easily be checked; to neuritis, neu- genuine. Bayer Is tajs. It’s always ralgia; to those pains peculiar to the same. It never depresses the women; or any suffering for which heart, so use it as often as needed; Bayer Aspirin is such an effective but the cause of any pain can be antidote. treated only by a doctor. BAYER ASPIRIN Atotofa is ttettafr wmkU Bay* Mndtoasd M—ajatiaiad Irtrartlwrld

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

U.S. DRY CHIEF WORKED WAY IN j SCHOOLOF LAW Youngquist Made sllO in First Six Months of His Practice. Bn Hcriprta-H(itcard Xncspatur Alliance WASHINGTON, Nov. 6.—Twenty years ago, the new assistant attor-ney-general, G. A. Youngquist, sat for six months in a law office in a little Minnesota town, and, during that whole time, netted an income of exactly $110.50. But he was only 24 then, and he had just been graduated from the St. Paul college of law. Since h# had earned his way through college by working as a stenographer, he decided to use this side line as an entering wedge to law work. He took a stenographic position in a lawyer’s office, and before many years had passed, he found he had been on the right track, for, not only had he become a full-fledged practicing attorney, but his former employer had taken him into lawpartnership, and the people had elected him county attorney. All this came about in a space of four years. Three more years passed and he left law work, as did also his partner, to join the American army. He helped to organize Company 1, Fifth infanty, Minnesota national guard, and was its first captain. After the war, Youngquist engaged in private law practice until 1921, when he was appointed assistant attorney-general of Minnesota. His advancement to the attorneygeneralship came In 1928. Youngquist, when a 10-year-old boy, was sent to live with an aunt and uncle, where he ran erands, did chores, and looked after the baby. He got some schooling during this time, he can not remember whether he got as far as the sixth or seventh grade. At any rate, when he was 12 he got a job in a creamery which paid $lO per month, some of which went to the aunt and uncle for board and room. Here he stayed until he was 15, then he struck out for himself, as farm hand, and office boy in a St. Paul business college, where he received a bookkeeping and stenography course as pay for his services. Carrying newspapers to pay his living expenses; and a succession of stenographic jobs, were the next stepping stones in his career. As the fall of 1906 approached, Youngquist was 21 and ambitious. He wanted to enter law school, but could do, so only as a conditional student, as he had not the sufficient school to register as a regular student.

However, this did not stop him, and before the three years of law school were over, he had taken examinations in all of the high schqpl subjects required for regular entry* as well as all his law school examinations, and had made such good grades that he was graduated cum laude. All during his law school course, he was earning his way working as a stenographer. About two years after his lawyer employer took him into law partnership, Youngquist married. He was then 30. He is 44 now, and has four children. charge”intent to kill Charles Shine Alleged to Have Attacked Wife, Other Man. Charles Shine, 29, of 3028 Jackson street, was held today on charges of assault and battery with intent to kill his wife and another man as they returned from a dance early this morning. After beating his wife, Mrs. Pearl Shine, 1465 South Illinois street, Shine drew a knife and attacked the other man, known to police only as Jimmie. The latter’s overcoat was ripped into shreds, but he was not’hurt.

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